On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel carried out coordinated airstrikes deep inside Iran. Those strikes reportedly killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and key commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Iran responded with missile and drone attacks on U.S. and Israeli military sites and targets across the Gulf region. Major world powers are calling for de-escalation while regional security and energy markets are already reacting.
Given that, here’s how to think about winners and losers so far.
Clear or emerging winners
United States and Israel
They achieved their immediate tactical goals — destroying leadership targets in Iran and inflicting major damage to military infrastructure. U.S. and Israeli officials are framing this as degrading Iran’s ability to threaten the region. Their air defenses and coordinated operations so far have limited major blowback on their own territory.
Israel and the United States have achieved significant tactical objectives. The Israeli Air Force and U.S. B-2 bombers successfully targeted Iran’s internal security apparatus, including the IRGC Sarallah Headquarters in Tehran. This decapitation campaign removed senior leadership and severely degraded Iran’s command-and-control capabilities. Military analysts argue that the destruction of missile launchers and air defense systems has given the combined forces air superiority over central Iran.
The Trump administration has framed the conflict as a decisive blow to a nuclear threshold state. By hitting facilities in Natanz and Fordow, the U.S. and Israel likely set back Iran’s nuclear program, though the duration of this setback remains a point of debate among intelligence agencies. For the U.S., the operation serves as a demonstration of a doctrine of force without long-term ground occupation.
Defense and security sectors
Markets tied to defense stocks and safe-haven assets like gold have jumped because of the war risk premium. Investors fear instability, which pushes money into defense contractors and precious metals.
Regional allies of the U.S. and Israel
Saudi Arabia, Gulf states, and other partners pressing for strong action against Iran may find their security agendas validated in the short term. Washington’s willingness to strike could strengthen those alliances.
Clear or emerging losers
Iran’s regime and economy
Iran has taken heavy damage to infrastructure and leadership, and the death of Khamenei is a seismic blow to its political system. Its economy, already under strain from sanctions, faces billions in reconstruction costs and lost exports.
Even if the regime survives, the war accelerates existing domestic strains and could boost nationalist hard-liners who justify repression and militarization rather than reform.
Iran proxies
With Iran’s resources crippled, these groups face diminished funding and arms, impacting their operations.
Civilians on all sides
Non-combatants have died from airstrikes and retaliation. Education facilities and residential areas have been hit. Regional instability disrupts commerce, travel, and energy flows.
Regional stability
Broader Middle East security is worse off. Iran’s retaliation operations have involved U.S. and allied bases in multiple countries. Airspace closures and fear of escalation increase the chances of miscalculation.
Global markets and consumers
Oil and energy markets usually swing wildly when Middle East wars flare. Even the fear of supply disruptions drives energy prices up. That hits consumers and non-energy sectors worldwide.
More ambiguous or medium-term outcomes
Iran as a cohesive state
Some argue crippling Iran’s leadership should weaken its regional project. Others warn that sidelining the religious hierarchy may accelerate militaristic nationalism rather than liberalization. The result depends on how the succession plays out and whether popular dissent can survive.
China and Russia
China and Russia have broadly avoided direct involvement. Slower oil flow and instability aren’t great for them, but they also aren’t committed to a big fight with the U.S. or Israel. That can be a kind of indirect loss — neither gains a strong position while watching instability rise.
As the top importer of Iranian oil, China loses a discounted supply source, forcing reliance on pricier alternatives (e.g., from Saudi Arabia or Russia), which could inflate costs, slow growth, and weaken its position in trade negotiations with the US.
Iran was a vital partner for Russian military tech (e.g., drones) and anti-Western alignment; its weakening isolates Russia further in the Middle East and strains the Russia-Iran-China axis.
Militarily, the U.S. and Israel have imposed costs on Iran. Financially, weapons contractors and safe-haven assets gain. Politically, some regional partners feel validated. But the humanitarian toll, economic disruption, and risk of wider escalation make this a losing scenario for ordinary people in Iran, the Middle East, and beyond. The long-term strategic outcomes are still deeply uncertain.
